Noun
one-handedness (uncountable)
- The quality of having a dominant hand; left-handedness or right-handedness.
1875, Richard Anthony Proctor, Science Byways, page 326:Again some persons are too right-handed (I question, indeed, whether one-handedness, whether right or left be chiefly employed, does not in all cases involve a loss of power).
- Chirality
2011, Faïza Bergaya, B.K.G. Theng, G. Lagaly, Handbook of Clay Science, →ISBN, page 383:It must be noted that the stimulating hypotheses of Cairns-Smith (1982) emphasizing the role of clays in the origin of life do not account for the crucial one-handedness of biopolymers required to ensure the survival of self-replicating organic systems.
- The possession of only one hand or the ability to use only one hand; the loss of the use of one hand.
2011, Hanna Zacks, More Than Meets the Eye: A Journey Into the Mysteries of Psychic Phenomena, →ISBN, page 48:The young man had married a woman who had only one hand, and it was on the fact of her one-handedness that my thought was focused.
2014, Teodor Mladenov, Critical Theory and Disability: A Phenomenological Approach, →ISBN:Phenomenologically speaking, such differences are immediately incorportated into the lived body by being endowed with meaning in the context of one's everyday activities. Thus one-handedness can be lived, for example, as difficulty with pouring water into a jug, blindness--as exclusion from social interaction, and deafness -- as peaceful silence in the midst of a noisy journey.
- The state of choosing to use only one hand.
2009, Robin Kelley, Thelonious Monk: The Life and Times of an American Original, →ISBN:A later generation of bebop pianists would often be accused of one-handedness; their right hands flew along with melodies and improvisations, while their "weak" left hands just plonked chords.
2001, Fred Howard, Human Creatures, →ISBN, page 121:One-handedness is essential for training to great skill in balanced action with any sensible design of weapon, as in fencing, but more especially when fighting from behind a tree or when being prepared to run if overcome (except possibly with bows and arrows where the defense handedness is reversed.)
1990, C. W. Smith, James Ward Lee, Thin Men of Haddam, →ISBN, page 11:Bond's production of the One-Handed Cigarette Roll has passed unattended — Mendez refuses to acknowledge the one-handedness simply to thwart Bond, whose cigarette rolling he believes to originate more from histrionic impulse than economic necessity.
- The quality of being designed for only one hand.
2015, Nancy J. Hirschmann, Beth Linker, Civil Disabilities: Citizenship, Membership, and Belonging, →ISBN, page 132:As can be witnessed in a performance of that work by Fleisher, it is indeed a dazzling display piece in which, if it is only heard and not seen, its one-handedness might evade listeners' notice.
- A state in which only one person is active
1884, Good Words Volume 25, page 67:Holding intercourse with Sir William at this date partook a good deal of the nature of a one-handed conversation, and the one-handedness seemed to increase when the only share of the host, in the post-prandial conviviality, consisted in passing the decanters, which Sir William was scrupulous to do.
- (figurative) Weakness, limitation
1892, The Review of Reviews - Volume 4, page 466:Mr. Herbert makes his moan over the awful one-handedness and one-leggedness of our rich classes, who are smitten with the universal incapacity to help theniselves.
Translations
Translations
- German: Einhändigkeit f
- Turkish: tek elli olma
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